Châteaux in Provence: 7 Venues with Strong Identity for a Destination Wedding
A concise guide for couples choosing a wedding venue in the South of France
by Polina Levska, Destination Wedding Photographer in Provence & Beyond
Planning a destination wedding in Provence can feel exciting and overwhelming at the same time. There are many beautiful venues, but not every château offers the same experience.

Some are ideal for a full wedding weekend. Some feel more intimate and private. Others stand out for landscape, hospitality, or a more contemporary sense of luxury.

This guide is designed to help you compare eight beautiful châteaux in Provence and understand how each one differs in atmosphere, style, and the kind of wedding experience it can offer.
Château de Tourreau
If you’re planning a full wedding weekend and want visual range
Château de Tourreau is one of the most versatile wedding venues in Provence for couples planning a full wedding weekend. It has scale, strong architectural presence, and enough variation across the estate to host multiple events within one venue.
The estate offers different zones and visual settings for photography — from more formal to more relaxed and more dynamic moments. This makes it possible to build a full wedding weekend in one location while keeping visual variety throughout the celebration.
One of Tourreau’s standout features is its incredible façade with shutters, which creates a very distinctive French château look in photographs. There is also a beautiful view of the château from the poolside, which adds another strong perspective for shooting.
Another major advantage is its strong drone potential — both in daylight (architecture and estate geometry) and in the evening, when the lights come on and the property looks especially striking.
Tourreau is especially well suited to couples who want to combine classic elegance with a more fashion-forward approach to wedding styling and visual direction.

Best for: multi-day destination weddings, larger celebrations, and couples who want visual variety without changing venue.
Château de la Gaude
Provence with a contemporary luxury language
Château de la Gaude is ideal for couples who want Provence, but with a more design-led and hospitality-driven experience. It combines heritage architecture with a polished luxury environment, which gives the wedding a more contemporary tone from the start.
This is a venue where guest experience matters as much as visual impact: dining, service, and overall curation are a central part of the appeal. For many international couples, that makes it especially attractive — it offers a South of France setting in a way that feels more contemporary than rustic.
Visually, La Gaude works well for celebrations with a refined, editorial aesthetic. It is less about a “storybook château” look and more about texture, detail, and a modern sense of luxury.
One of the venue’s standout visual features is its maze, which creates strong opportunities for creative portraits and more editorial-style images. It adds structure, depth, and a different photographic backdrop beyond the château façade and terraces.
Château de la Gaude is especially well suited to couples who want a refined Provence wedding with a modern luxury feel and strong visual identity.

Best for: couples who care about gastronomy, design, and a more curated hotel-style wedding experience.
Château de Robernier
A private-estate château feel with a classic wedding layout
Château de Robernier is a strong choice for couples who want a genuine château setting with privacy and a traditional sense of occasion. It has the kind of layout that naturally supports a wedding day: arrival, ceremony, cocktails, dinner, and evening celebration — without needing to force the flow.
What works especially well here is the balance between château architecture and Provençal surroundings.
The estate gives enough visual structure for a refined, editorial look, while the landscape softens the formality and keeps the atmosphere grounded.
This venue suits couples who want a destination wedding that feels immersive and self-contained — less hotel, more private celebration.

Best for: couples prioritising exclusivity, classic château atmosphere, and a full-event flow in one location.
Château d’Estoublon
Landscape-driven Provence luxury with vineyards and olive groves
La Bastide de Gordes offers a completely different kind of Provence wedding experience. Instead of a countryside estate, you are working with a hilltop property in one of the region’s most iconic villages — and that shifts the mood from château grounds to panoramic atmosphere.
This venue is especially compelling for couples who want the wedding to feel connected to a destination, not just placed inside it. Gordes itself becomes part of the guest experience, and that can make the weekend feel richer and more memorable without adding unnecessary production.
From a photography perspective, the strength of this venue is perspective: terraces, views, layered stone, changing light, and a constant sense of depth in the frame. It is less about scale and symmetry, more about location and visual drama.

Best for: couples drawn to views, village atmosphere, and a highly recognisable Provence setting.
Château de Sannes
A Provence estate with real landscape range — vineyards, lavender, gardens, and event flexibility
Château de Sannes is a strong option for couples who want a venue that feels distinctly Provençal without losing structure or elegance. Located in the Luberon (with the estate presenting itself as a vineyard property in the heart of Provence, near Aix-en-Provence), it combines château character with a broader domain atmosphere — vineyards, gardens, and open landscape are part of the identity, not just the backdrop.
Photo: loveismoreweddings.com
What makes Sannes particularly interesting for a wedding is its spatial variety. Venue descriptions highlight multiple event areas across the estate — including poolside cocktails, ceremony options, and a dinner setting in the orangerie with views over the gardens, lake, and vineyards. That kind of layout is especially valuable for multi-part celebrations because it helps the day evolve visually instead of staying in one look from start to finish.
From a photography perspective, Château de Sannes works well for couples who want a gallery with both architectural polish and landscape depth. It gives you more than façade-driven château imagery: the surrounding estate adds texture, scale, and a stronger sense of place.

Best for: couples who want a Luberon wedding venue with vineyard energy, flexible event zones, and a more landscape-driven Provence atmosphere.
Château des Alpilles
If you want an old-money Provence mood with discreet luxury
Château des Alpilles is a very strong choice for couples who want that quieter, old-money Provence feeling — less “event venue energy,” more elegant house-in-the-country atmosphere with real character. The official site presents it as a 5-star boutique hotel on the edge of Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, set within a seven-hectare park and centered around a beautifully restored Maison de Maître.
What makes it special in a wedding shortlist like this is the tone. It feels refined and private, but not flashy. The long plane-tree approach, the historic house, and the “discreet luxury” identity give it a very specific visual language — especially if you’re drawn to understated elegance rather than theatrical grandeur. The venue also publishes a dedicated wedding brochure, which is always useful for couples who want clarity early in the planning process.
From a photography perspective, this is a beautiful option for couples who want a softer, more intimate kind of luxury — strong façade moments, textured interiors, and a Saint-Rémy atmosphere that feels grounded and chic.

A practical note: this venue works especially well when your styling matches its tone (elegant, restrained, intentional). It’s the kind of place where thoughtful design choices usually look stronger than overproduction.
Photos: Chateau des Alpilles